This year’s first Blue Monday featured a variety of performances, from classical poetry recitations to original spoken word pieces and even a song accompanied by a ukelele.
This year’s first Blue Monday featured a variety of performances, from classical poetry recitations to original spoken word pieces and even a song accompanied by a ukelele.
March is a long and busy month for U of O students. It also signifies lots of change. Here are some books to guide you.
Are you tired of taking notes in class? Don’t take them! I don’t take them and neither should you.
Starting out at U of O, you probably find the amount of reading material excessive, but you are not alone.
I’ve compiled a list of the most popular books on TikTok’s #BookTok. Here are the ones I’ve read, and whether I think they’re worth the hype or not.
Some students prefer online readings, others prefer physical textbooks. A third group, faced with this dilemma, just opt out of doing readings at all.
The English undergraduate association gives students the chance to bring their own scary creations to life at their spooky story contest.
The Booker Prize winning author was a featured guest at the special event hosted by the Ottawa International Writer’s Festival. Charismatic and humorous, he led the audience through insightful dialogue spanning topics from religion and philosophy to language and authorship while promoting his new book.
The real intrigue of Missing Children, lies not in the whereabouts of the protagonist’s daughter, Shawn, who returns home unharmed, but in what caused her disappearance, and whether it’s related to the increasing number of children going missing from Troutstream.
What is lost is now found with a Malcolm Lowry novel, and the U of O Press has their hands on it.
Student teams up with award-winning artists for love-struck poetry reading Photo by Remi Yuan Remember the days before romance became mass-produced and depersonalized by clogged dating websites and TV programs like The Bachelor? In a new collaborative work, two award-winning Canadian artists try to remember. Written by Gerald Lampert Award-winner Joanne Arnott and illustrated by …
Reading levels on campus reached a crisis point this past reading week, causing most University of Ottawa services to become overwhelmed.
Four Fulcrum editors took on the topic of student reading habits and came back with four different responses.